Thursday, January 5, 2012

Finally on TV, Bachmann reminds of Iowa roots (AP)

VALLEY JUNCTION, Iowa ? Michele Bachmann finally joined the Iowa television ad fray Monday, pushing her hometown connection and saying she stood up to President Barack Obama as other Republicans "were cutting deals" with the Democrat.

It was a late start for an ad campaign as Iowa Republicans head to caucuses on Tuesday. She's trailing badly.

The native-daughter theme also permeated a door-to-door walk by Bachmann through a quaint business district outside Des Moines.

An adviser said her ad was airing on Fox cable stations and NBC affiliates across Iowa instead of a full-range purchase, a clear sign she is low on cash. She had a more visible TV ad presence before a nonbinding test vote she won this summer.

The ad twice mentions Bachmann's Iowa heritage and calls her "one of our own." It talks of her background as a federal tax attorney ? she worked to collect debts for the IRS ? and describes her as a "consistent conservative fighter" who won't back down.

Bachmann was born in Waterloo but later moved with her family to Minnesota, where she was elected to Congress in 2006.

While campaigning Monday, Bachmann stressed her native-state status.

"I believe without a shadow of a doubt that Iowans want to get behind their values and I believe I best represent their values," she said after fighting her way through thick crowds at some businesses.

Addressing reporters, she contrasted herself with her opponents and lobbed her hardest shot yet at Rick Santorum. The former Pennsylvania senator has rocketed to contender status while she has remained at the back of the GOP field, recent polls show.

Bachmann criticized Santorum for supporting a symbol of wasteful Washington spending, Alaska's "Bridge to Nowhere." She also jabbed him for once endorsing Sen. Arlen Specter, then a fellow Pennsylvania Republican who joined the Democratic Party in 2009. "Arlen Specter supplied the 60th vote that gave us Obamacare and gave us taxpayer-funded abortions. I never would have supported Arlen Specter, who is a pro-abortion candidate," she said.

Bachmann has bet her success on support among evangelical Christian voters and said she expects full congregations to caucus on her behalf.

She insists she'll go on no matter what happens Tuesday night. She and her top campaign advisers have tickets to South Carolina ? opting to head there rather than New Hampshire, which votes one week from Tuesday, on Jan. 10. The Bachmann team will fly commercial rather than on chartered flights like other campaigns with more money at their disposal.

Supporters who greeted her Monday said they weren't giving up hope for a strong finish.

Larry and Mary Abbott, retirees from Des Moines, said they intended to caucus for Bachmann no matter what the polls reflect.

"I think the polls are wrong," Larry Abbott said.

The Abbotts said they were getting daily contacts from the campaign and were confident in her chances.

"People are going to be surprised," he said.

"I hope they are," added Mary Abbott.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120103/ap_on_el_pr/us_bachmann

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Customers Are Key in Small Business Future

Customers are the key to your small business?s future. Are you ready to tap that huge potential? It may be small businesses that can best tap into this era in which customers are again in the driver?s seat. Check out our daily roundup for more on how to do it.

Trends & Tips

Customers will be key in 2012. Of course, customers have always been important to small business.?However,?today the customer has gained new power?thanks to social media and other tools.?This could be a tremendous benefit to your business when handled correctly.?Free From Broke

How to increase online trust. Small businesses increasingly must have an online presence. That?presence, like your offline?business, must?inspire trust with your customers. Here are six tips to help you do so with your small business Website.?FindMyBlogWay

New Frontiers

For new entrepreneurs opportunities abound. No matter what projections might say, there are likely to be more opportunities than ever for small business. So what?does the future hold?for your small business and what?opportunities will you make?work for you??Seth Godin?s Blog

Five tips for testing your marketing. Marketing may be one part art but it can be a science as well. There?s no need to leave your marketing strategy completely to chance. Testing your marketing is easier than ever. Here?s one approach that may work for you.?Inc.com

Operations

Small biz tax tips for 2012. No sooner does the new year begin, but we face another small business tax season looming ahead. Here are some tips that every small business should consider when planning?for that annual reality.?Entrepreneur

Changes at Google+. Up until recently the new Google social network has only allowed the us of a person?s real name, making small business branding difficult. But all that is changing with a new approach now allowing?business identities and Pseudonyms. DIY Marketers

Bookshelf

The End of Business as Usual. This review by Ivana Taylor of the new book by Brian Solis looks at how social media and much of the rest of your small business strategy will be changing soon. Small Business Trends

Tech

Cloud options multiply for small business. You don?t need to be a big business to take advantage of the tools available in the cloud. Here?s an overview of one solution that is designed to fit small business needs. Smallbiz Technology

Final Thoughts

What NOT to do in 2012. As important as those things you may want to start doing in your small business may be are the things you no longer want to do. Here are some things you may consider adding to the list. Fortune Marketing Company

PR opportunities you should consider. It may not be the first thing on your agenda in the new year, but maybe it should be. PR opportunities for your business abound. Here is a list to get you thinking about how to change your strategy. Understanding Marketing

Source: http://smallbiztrends.com/2012/01/customers-are-key-in-small-business-future.html

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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

France: Only 6 veiled women fined since April (AP)

PARIS ? France's interior minister says that since a ban on face-covering Islamic veils took effect in April only six women have been convicted and fined.

Claude Gueant said in an interview with the daily Le Monde published Monday that no woman has been sent to a citizenship class ? another potential punishment.

Controversy surrounded the law. Muslim leaders, most of them opposed to burqa-style veils, say the it stigmatizes all followers of Islam.

Gueant says police cited a total of 237 women but only six were convicted. He expressed surprise that nearly a quarter of the women police questioned had converted to Islam.

Backers say the law is aimed at ensuring France's secular values and gender equality and nipping radical Islam in the bud.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120102/ap_on_re_eu/eu_france_forbidden_veil

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Monday, January 2, 2012

Arab League mission to Syria becomes focus of demands for military intervention

Home ? World News ? Middle East ? Syria

By Chris Marsden
31 December 2011

The visit by Arab League observers to Homs, Hama, Idlib, Deraa , the Damascus suburb of Douma and other conflict zones has become the focus of concerted demands for the Western powers to intervene militarily into the ongoing civil war in Syria.

The mission was endorsed by Syria, in line with an Arab League plan calling for the withdrawal of military forces, a halt to violence against civilians and the release of detainees.

The opposition Syrian National Council (SNC) initially responded with a media campaign designed to discredit the mission. Demonstrations were staged wherever the observers visited.

The Arab League monitors are clearly under orders from Washington to come up with a hostile report on the regime of President Bashir al-Assad. On Tuesday, the US State Department warned that ?if the Syrian regime continues to resist and disregard Arab League efforts, the international community will consider other means to protect Syrian civilians.?

There is no reason to assume that the Arab League will disappoint the US. The head of the observers, Sudanese intelligence chief General Mustafa al-Dabi, has been denounced for his involvement in war crimes in Darfur, especially after he said the ?situation seemed reassuring? on his initial visit to Homs. But Sudan?s Islamist government was given charge of the mission as reward for its support for the war to overthrow Colonel Muammar Gaddafi in Libya.

By Friday, amid mass opposition rallies following prayers in several cities, there was a marked change in tone towards the mission. Washington urged critics to allow the monitors to finish their work and businessman Rami Abdul Rahman, head of the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, described the Arab League?s presence as ?the only ray of light? for Syrians.

Foreign Policy magazine this week wrote that ?top officials in President Barack Obama?s administration are quietly preparing options for how to assist the Syrian opposition,? including the option of setting up a no-fly zone. The US National Security Council (NSC) ?has begun an informal, quiet interagency process,? led by NSC Senior Director Steve Simon.

In mid-December, former Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) whistle-blower Sibel Edmonds wrote that US troops have been stationed on the Jordanian and Syrian borders.

Foreign Policy cites a policy paper of the Syrian National Council, entitled ?Safe Area for Syria,? which lays out the argument for armed intervention. The magazine fails to explain that the paper was produced by the Strategic Research and Communication Centre, whose head, Ausama Monajed, was previously in charge of Barada TV, a London-based US government-funded satellite network.

An Arab front for military operations with the aim of deposing Assad is considered politically expedient by Washington and other Western powers. This would deprive their ultimate target, Iran, of its main regional ally and help consolidate US hegemony of the entire Middle East, to the detriment of Russia and China.

SNC head Burhan Ghalioun has made clear that the SNC understands the Arab League plan to be a diversionary tactic behind which imperialist intervention is being prepared. He urged the Arab League and the United Nations ?to defend Syrians by establishing isolated and secure areas inside Syria.?

The Arab League ?plan to defuse the crisis? is a ?good? plan,? he said, ?but I do not believe the Arab League really has the means? to enforce it. ?It is better if the UN Security Council takes this (Arab League) plan, adopts it and provides the means for its application. That would give it more force.?

Events in Syria closely mirror the run-up to the military campaign to depose Gaddafi in Libya, with the SNC acting as a front for the operations of US, British and French forces and those of the Gulf regimes.

On December 27, the right-wing Israeli web site DEBKAfile alleged that Qatar was building up a ?Sunni intervention force of Libyan, Iraqi terrorists against Assad.?

It wrote, ?The new highly mobile force boosts the anti-Assad Free Syrian Army, whose numbers have jumped to 20,000 fighters, armed and funded by Qatar and now forming into military battalions and brigades at their bases in Turkey? the Qatari and Saudi rulers approved a crash program for the Qatari chief of staff, Maj.-Gen Hamas Ali al-Attiya, to weld this mobile intervention Sunni Muslim force out of Al Qaeda-linked operatives for rapid deployment on the Turkish-Syrian border.?

DEBKAfile reports that the force numbers 2,500, including 1,000 members of the Islamic Fighting Group in Libya (IFGL) and 1,000 operatives of the Iraqi Ansar al-Sunna.

The report cannot be verified, but it is in line with statements made by Britain?s Sir David Richards, chief of the defence staff, to the Royal United Service Institute in London this month. He insisted that the ?key? to the success of the Libyan intervention, providing a model for future UK foreign policy, was ?integrating the Qataris, Emiratis and Jordanians into the operation.?

These countries had made up the key land element of the war in Libya, Richards said. ?Without them and their defence chiefs? leadership,? he declared, ?especially the huge understanding they brought to the campaign, it is unlikely that the NTC?s [National Transitional Council] militias could have successfully acted as the land element without which the right outcome would have been impossible.?

Qatar first admitted its role in providing ground troops to Libya in late October. Chief-of-Staff Major-General Hamad bin Ali al-Atiya, said, ?We were among [the NTC] and the numbers of Qataris on the ground were hundreds in every region. Training and communications had been in Qatari hands? We acted as the link between the rebels and NATO forces.?

The Wall Street Journal on October 17 reported: ?With the blessing of Western intelligence agencies, Qatar flew at least 18 weapons shipments in all to anti-Gaddafi rebel forces this spring and summer,? the majority directly to ?militias run by Islamist leaders.?

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Jordan were all also active in the Libyan intervention.

Back in November, Richards told Sky News that Britain had contingency plans should Iran?s nuclear program or a deteriorating situation in Syria necessitate action. ?We?ve got a lot of plans in the locker, and we talk to other nations who would inevitably be involved in them so that if ever the situation deteriorated to the stage where armed force would have to be used, we could do it quickly and efficiently,? he said.

On December 29, Reuters issued an eyewitness account of the real situation on the ground in Homs. He describes a ?vicious sectarian fight ? tearing Homs apart and overshadowing peaceful protest. Roads are blocked with checkpoints and some neighbourhoods are carved up by trenches. Kidnappings are an almost daily occurrence.?

The Free Syrian Army ?launch attacks with increasing frequency,? Reuters wrote, while in Alawite neighbourhoods armed men and the security forces have formed their own squads.

Source: http://www.wsws.org/articles/2011/dec2011/syri-d31.shtml

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Apple TV Hacked to Run iOS Apps Full-Screen

iOS app developer and hacker extraordinaire Steve Troughton-Smith has managed to get iPhone and iPad apps running full screen on an Apple TV. It’s not pretty, but it works, and iPad apps look pretty decent when blown up onto a larger screen.
The hack is running on a jailbroken Apple TV (using the standard Season Pass [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/4m13PJgId5k/

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Sunday, January 1, 2012

Verizon reverses on $2 fee for one-time payments (AP)

NEW YORK ? After a customer backlash, Verizon Wireless on Friday dropped a plan to start charging $2 for every payment subscribers make over the phone or online with their credit or debit cards.

In a statement on its website Friday, the company said "customer feedback" prompted the decision to drop the "convenience fee" it wanted to introduce on Jan. 15.

Verizon wanted to steer people to electronic check payments, which are cheaper, and automatic credit card payments, which are more reliable.

A petition on Change.org against the fees had gathered more than 95,000 names by Friday afternoon, a day after Verizon, the country's largest cellphone company, announced the fees. The petition was set up by Molly Katchpole, who earlier this year started a successful campaign to make Bank of America drop a $5-per-month fee for debit-card use.

Payment processors for power companies usually charge "convenience fees" of up to $5 for every payment made by phone or online, but cellphone companies haven't taken the step yet. The furor against Verizon hints that they may have to wait further.

Verizon Wireless serves 91 million phones and other devices on accounts that pay the company directly, and more who pay indirectly through other companies. It's a joint venture of Verizon Communications Inc. of New York and Vodafone Group PLC of Britain.

___

Online:

Verizon's statement: http://news.verizonwireless.com/news/2011/12/pr2011-12-30.html

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_hi_te/us_verizon_wireless_monthly_fees

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Shopping P?tio Dom Lu?s: Breast cancer bra

Prevent breast cancer. Do the self-examination.

Advertising Agency: Bolero, Fortaleza, Brazil
Creative Directors: Andr? Mota, Alex Moreira
Art Director: Kendy Shirasu
Copywriter: Julio Temporal
Additional credits: Clarissa Menezes Thili? Arag?o, Th?mas Fernandes
Published: October 2011

Source: http://adsoftheworld.com/media/ambient/shopping_patio_dom_luis_breast_cancer_bra

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